The Ubiquiti Bullet 2HP currently requires "activation." However, the manufacturer discontinued it a long time ago and stopped issuing any new firmware for it. It is thus no longer a product being deployed commercially, by ISPs who would pay to license software for it, but rather an orphan - just like an older Linksys router. (The same is true of the Picostation 2HP, which uses the same circuit board but with a smaller case and an SMA connector rather than an N connector.) DD-WRT developers: would you consider removing this model from your list of products requiring an activation fee, so that users who obtain these radios secondhand can get a current, stable, secure OS for them and amateur radio operators can use them as mesh nodes? Otherwise, they will most likely wind up in the landfill. It would be a service to the environment to do this.

Everything with your sad story was going great until you mentioned the environment. That part you should have left off. Nobody at DD-WRT gives a LIVING FUCK about the environment. _________________http://69.175.13.131:8015 Streaming Week-End Disco. Station Ripper V 1.1 will do.

Amateur radio operators are doing good things for their communities with older hardware like this. Given that the DD-WRT developers are unlikely to get more revenue from licensing the firmware for this hardware (which they are rebuilding with every version they release), they can help by allowing hams to use the software.

I think that it would be a good time to be free, anyone using to run bussines will require super channel to be activated, for home users like me, it works great because of high tx power, but AirOS low version, for openwrt low RAM, dd-wrt to much to pay for low performace

Brett Glass wrote:

The Ubiquiti Bullet 2HP currently requires "activation." However, the manufacturer discontinued it a long time ago and stopped issuing any new firmware for it. It is thus no longer a product being deployed commercially, by ISPs who would pay to license software for it, but rather an orphan - just like an older Linksys router. (The same is true of the Picostation 2HP, which uses the same circuit board but with a smaller case and an SMA connector rather than an N connector.) DD-WRT developers: would you consider removing this model from your list of products requiring an activation fee, so that users who obtain these radios secondhand can get a current, stable, secure OS for them and amateur radio operators can use them as mesh nodes? Otherwise, they will most likely wind up in the landfill. It would be a service to the environment to do this.

You cannot post new topics in this forumYou cannot reply to topics in this forumYou cannot edit your posts in this forumYou cannot delete your posts in this forumYou cannot vote in polls in this forumYou cannot attach files in this forumYou cannot download files in this forum